Matt Wells, Utah State football keep class together after Andersen's departure

By Kyle Goon The Salt Lake Tribune

Published February 2, 2013 5:18 pm

College football football • Even without Andersen, Aggies have held on to recruiting power.

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This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2013, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Whenever Utah State hosted football recruits this year, whether they were from Florida, Texas, Arizona or just down the street, coach Matt Wells got used to hearing a common refrain.

"Once you get a kid to campus, they always say, 'It's better than I thought,' " he said. "Structurally and facility-wise, we are improving. But the thing we always tell them is it's the people inside the buildings who count. Those systems and people are recruiting well for us."

Even in a year when Utah State lost its head coach, the Aggies were able to hold on to just about all of the recruits they had and even stretch out for a few more that they wouldn't have gotten a few years ago.

Why? Winning, for one. An 11-2 season still resounded for recruits. And many Aggie commits who spoke to The Salt Lake Tribune see Utah State continuing on that trajectory.

The program has a university president and athletic director who have helped shake off the burdens of debt. USU is moving to the Mountain West, ensuring big games and healthy competition for the foreseeable future. A new weight room and a partnership with Nike made the incoming class feel like the program is ready to stay competitive in the new conference.

That extra dimension combined with the collegiate feel of Logan and the university community to make some pretty good football players feel at home. The Aggies claimed some surprising swaps: Arizona quarterback Darell Garretson switched from San Jose State, and Hayden Weichers changed his mind from BYU.

"First and foremost, we recruit in-state kids, but I think wherever we've gone, we've been well-received," Wells said. "I think the biggest draw is a community and administration that is very supportive. The support we get here is unbelievable."

Perhaps most importantly for Wells, he's passed his big first test. Utah State was able to hold on to many of the prospects the program recruited under Gary Andersen. Despite Andersen's sudden flight to Wisconsin, only one recruit  his son, Chasen Andersen, who had committed a few weeks before  changed his destination.

Many recruits cited relationships with Wells prior to his promotion to head coach. Wells himself said the best approach to keeping those prospects was a direct one. Some of the guys who Utah State fought off bigger schools for late in the process included Tyshon Mosley, Joe Malanga and Marwin Evans.

"The challenge was to settle their minds," he said. "We let them know of the continuity and be honest and open with them. And we didn't lose one guy who had been with us through the summer."

Specifically, this class will go a long way to shore up the offensive line and receiving corps. Wells also pointed to depth in the secondary and the quarterback positions as big areas the Aggies addressed.

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